Re: [PATCH v3 01/10] dt-bindings: mtd: brcmnand: Updates for bcmbca SoCs

From: William Zhang
Date: Thu Jan 25 2024 - 20:55:47 EST




On 1/25/24 11:51, Conor Dooley wrote:

On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 07:01:48PM -0800, William Zhang wrote:
On 1/24/24 09:24, Conor Dooley wrote:
On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 07:04:49PM -0800, David Regan wrote:
From: William Zhang <william.zhang@xxxxxxxxxxxx>

Update the descriptions to reflect different families of broadband SoC and
use the general name bcmbca for ARM based SoC.

Add brcm,nand-use-wp property to have an option for disabling this
feature on broadband board design that does not use write protection.

Add brcm,nand-ecc-use-strap to get ecc setting from board boot strap for
broadband board designs because they do not specify ecc setting in dts
but rather using the strap setting.

Remove the requirement of interrupts property to reflect the driver
code. Also add myself to the list of maintainers.

Signed-off-by: William Zhang <william.zhang@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: David Regan <dregan@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
Changes in v3:
- Update brcm,nand-use-wp description
- Revert the description change to BCM63168 SoC-specific NAND controller
---
Changes in v2:
- Revert the new compatible string nand-bcmbca
- Drop the BCM63168 compatible fix to avoid any potential ABI
incompatibility issue
- Simplify the explanation for brcm,nand-use-wp
- Keep the interrupt name requirement when interrupt number is specified
---
.../bindings/mtd/brcm,brcmnand.yaml | 37 ++++++++++++++++---
1 file changed, 32 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)

diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/brcm,brcmnand.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/brcm,brcmnand.yaml
index f57e96374e67..752c6ee98a7d 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/brcm,brcmnand.yaml
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/brcm,brcmnand.yaml
@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ title: Broadcom STB NAND Controller
maintainers:
- Brian Norris <computersforpeace@xxxxxxxxx>
- Kamal Dasu <kdasu.kdev@xxxxxxxxx>
+ - William Zhang <william.zhang@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
description: |
The Broadcom Set-Top Box NAND controller supports low-level access to raw NAND
@@ -18,9 +19,10 @@ description: |
supports basic PROGRAM and READ functions, among other features.
This controller was originally designed for STB SoCs (BCM7xxx) but is now
- available on a variety of Broadcom SoCs, including some BCM3xxx, BCM63xx, and
- iProc/Cygnus. Its history includes several similar (but not fully register
- compatible) versions.
+ available on a variety of Broadcom SoCs, including some BCM3xxx, MIPS based
+ Broadband SoC (BCM63xx), ARM based Broadband SoC (BCMBCA) and iProc/Cygnus.
+ Its history includes several similar (but not fully register compatible)
+ versions.
-- Additional SoC-specific NAND controller properties --
@@ -53,7 +55,7 @@ properties:
- brcm,brcmnand-v7.2
- brcm,brcmnand-v7.3
- const: brcm,brcmnand
- - description: BCM63138 SoC-specific NAND controller
+ - description: BCMBCA SoC-specific NAND controller
items:
- const: brcm,nand-bcm63138
- enum:
@@ -111,6 +113,20 @@ properties:
earlier versions of this core that include WP
type: boolean
+ brcm,nand-use-wp:
+ description:
+ Use this property to indicate if board design uses
+ controller's write protection feature and connects its
+ NAND_WPb pin to nand chip's WP_L pin.

By default the driver
+ uses a module parameter with default value set to enable to
+ control this feature for all boards. Use this dts property to
+ override the default behavior and enable/disable this feature
+ through board dts on a per board basis.

None of this information about module parameters is relevant in the
binding, as it should be independent of the implementation of one
particular operating system.

Agree this is OS related stuff. I was trying to make it more clean by
explaining how it is implemented in linux. And if we were to implement the
driver for another OS, there will be at least a default value for wp_on. I
will remove any mention of module parameter from this doc.

If the module parameter is not provided, what does the driver do?
If "wp_on" is the module parameter, then the default is to enable the
write protection feature. If that's correct, it seems to me that the
property should be called something like "brcm,no-wp". This property
would be a boolean that indicates that the NAND_WPb and WP_L pins are
not connected & nothing more. Clearly if the module param tries to
enable WP and the DT property indicates that it is not supported you
can decline to enable the feature, but that is up to the drivers in
the OS to decide.

If I were to implement this from day one, I certainly will choose the same
approach as you suggested here. But there is existing brcm,nand-has-wp
property for other purpose and now if we have brcm,no-wp, it will be more
confusing with that property IMHO. I prefer to keep use the "has" for
feature availability and "use" for feature being used or not.

"brcm,wp-not-connected" then, since I want it to become a boolean and it
would better communicate what the problem is than "brcm,dont-use-wp"
would.

And the reason I keep it as int is because there could be a potential value
of 2 for another mode that the current driver could set the wp_on to.

Can you explain, in driver independent terms, what this other mode has
to do with how the WP is connected?
Either you've got the standard scenario where apparently "NAND_WPb" and
"WP_L" are connected and another situation where they are not.
Is there another pin configuration in addition to that, that this 3rd
mode represents?

The 3rd mode is WP pin connected but wp feature is disabled in the controller.

I
don't see it is being used in BCMBCA product but I am not sure about other
SoC family. So I don't want to completely close the door here just in case.

If you ever need it, you could have a "brcm,wp-in-wacky-configuration"
property that indicates that the hardware is configured in that way
(providing that this hardware configuration is not just "NAND_WPb" and
"WP_L" pins connected. The property can very easily be made mutually
exclusive with "brcm,wp-not-connected" iff it ever comes to be.
Yes we could have a new property but if we can have a single int property to cover all, IMHO it is better to just have one property as these three modes are related. I would really like to have it as an int property to keep things simple.

But if you think this is absolutely against the dts rule, I will switch to the "brcm,wp-not-connected" boolean property as you suggested.


+ Set to 0 if WP pins are not connected and feature is not
+ used. Set to 1 if WP pins are connected and feature is used.

As it stands, this property is firmly in the "software policy" side
of things, as it is being used as an override for a module parameter,
particularly given you have properties for each direction. Whether or
not the feature is to be used by the operating system is not relevant to
the binding.

I don't understand why this is a software policy. This is the board design
choice although it does override the driver default value. But it is still
board or device setting and describe the hardware. OS has to follow this
hardware configuration and set up accordingly.

The software policy side of things is that you are instructing the
software what to do with "use" nature of it and the force enable &
disable options for the property. A boolean property that tells software
that the wp is not connected is all you need, as far as I can tell.
That should be sufficient information for the operating system to know
whether or not it can use the wp.


+ $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32
+ enum: [0, 1]
+
patternProperties:
"^nand@[a-f0-9]$":
type: object
@@ -137,6 +153,16 @@ patternProperties:
layout.
$ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32
+ brcm,nand-ecc-use-strap:
+ description:
+ This flag is used by the driver to get the ecc strength and
+ spare area size from the SoC NAND boot strap setting. This
+ is commonly used by the BCMBCA SoC board design.

Quoting from v1, as I didn't get to it in time:

| > This property I'm not all that sure about either. If the specific
| > properties that you mention here are not set in the DT what happens at
| > the moment?
| >
| In that case, the ecc strength and oob size come from ONFI or nand id
| decoding. But that is usually the minimum requirement and user can
| choose to use stronger ecc as long as there is enough oob spare area in
| the nand chip.
|
| > I suppose what I am getting at is why are the bootstrap settings not
| > always used in the absence of specific values provided in the DT?
| >
| This is because the STB, iProc and other chip and their board design may
| not have or use the strap setting. But for BCMBCA SoC and board
| reference design, we always use the strap setting.

My main question here I suppose is why would you need this property at
all? If the specific properties are provided (nand-ecc-strength etc)
then use them, and if they are not use the strap settings?If
nand-ecc-strength does not exist, the current driver implementation
use the auto detected ecc strength from the NAND chip ONFI parameter which
is okay. But for BCABCM SoC and our reference board design, we don't use
nand-ecc-strength and don't want to use the auto detected value(as they are
typically minimum requirement) but rather use strap setting so I need a
third choice.

That seems reasonable. Please limit the property though to the SoCs
where it is relevant if you had not done so already.
Yes it is only for BCMBCA SoC that I am updating in this patch series.

Thanks for the explanation.

If there's no properties and no strap settings, the this property does
not help. If there's properties and strap settings, but properties are
wrong, then you just have some devicetrees that incorrectly describe the
hardware and need to be fixed.

True but manually setting nand-ecc-strength can be error prone like
copy/paste error. The hardware strap setting does not involve such edit in
the dts file so no error can happen.

Copy paste errors are not really an argument here, you could use that as
an excuse for anything DT property in the world.. You could copy paste
the wrong thing into the strap, and idk about you, but on the systems I
have it is far easier to change the DT passed to the kernel than what I
assume is an early bootloader stage? (I tried googling for "broadcom
strap" but there was nothing relevant)

Agree, the strap could be set incorrectly in the hardware but then the board likely won't be able to boot to linux for linux developer to work on. Changing dts is easy but obtaining the ecc setting from hardware strap automatically is no-brainer as it require no change in dts or any manual setting, assuming hardware is correct.

If ecc
+ strength and spare area size are set by nand-ecc-strength
+ and brcm,nand-oob-sector-size in the dts, these settings
+ have precedence and override this flag.

Again, IMO, this is not for the binding to decide. That is a decision
for the operating system to make.

Again this is just for historic reason and BCMBCA as late player does not
want to break any existing dts setting. So I thought it is useful to
explain here. I can remove this text if you don't think it should be in the
binding document.

I don't, at least not in that form. I think it is reasonable to explain
why these values are better though.
I understand the decision is for OS/driver to make. If we were to write another driver for other OS, the same precedence will apply too so the binding works the same way across all the OS. So I am not sure what better explanation or form I can put up here. I am open to any suggestion or I just delete it.


Thanks,
Conor.

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